Eliza's Secret Potion

The potion didn't grant wishes or offer immortality. Instead, it gave the drinker "Unfiltered Clarity." To swallow a drop was to see the world exactly as it was, stripped of lies, polite illusions, and the fog of doubt.

Upon entry, Agent K. Shaw discovered the residence had been overgrown from the inside out. The walls were breached by roots the size of tree trunks. In the center of the living room stood Ms. Vance. eliza's secret potion

Ms. Vance, age 74, was a reclusive former botanist dismissed from the Royal Academy of Sciences in 1988 for "unorthodox methodologies." According to recovered journals, Eliza sought to create a fertilizer that could revitalize extinct flora. The potion didn't grant wishes or offer immortality

Eliza’s shop stood at the edge of the Whispering Woods, a crooked little shack smelling of damp moss and burnt sugar. While she sold common cures for headaches and heartbreak, everyone knew about the vial tucked behind the jars of pickled ginger: her Secret Potion. It wasn't for sale. It was for the brave. Shaw discovered the residence had been overgrown from

Field agents report that the unstoppered bottle emits a scent profile of ozone, wet soil, and "nostalgia" (specific notes vary by subject, often described as the smell of a childhood home or a specific forgotten memory).

When agents attempted to confiscate the potion, a nearby sofa (overgrown with moss) lunged at the team. During the chaos, the bottle was dropped but did not break. A flash freeze containment unit was deployed to neutralize the immediate area. Ms. Vance was taken into custody but expired 4 hours later; her autopsy revealed her internal organs had entirely transmuted into chlorophyll-based structures.